For a number of years preceding 2011, the AMSA requirements for a trainee pilot licence have included an unrestricted master’s certificate (or equivalent Royal Australian Navy qualification), minimum recent experience as master, mate or pilot, a seafarer’s medical fitness certificate, bridge resource management training and an entitlement to work in Australia. Other requirements that have been more recently included are a trainee pilot induction course, a psychometric assessment and English language related testing.
Before 1993, masters aspiring to join the former pilot service, and identified as suitable by serving pilots, became known to the pilot service over a period of time.83 The main entry requirement for the former service was significant experience in the GBR area and time in command. The candidates either approached the service or those that were considered suitable were invited to join. Essentially, the assessment of their experience, capability and suitability was made by their future peers through a ballot. Approval for their selection was endorsed by the service’s secretaries. The process was competitive and, according to a pilot who joined the former service, less than 10 per cent of applicants succeeded.
In 1993, AMSA re-defined the pilot entry requirements. The basic requirements include an unrestricted master’s certificate, recent watchkeeping experience and a seafarer’s medical fitness certificate. As Torres Pilots had a small number of pilots (including three who came out of retirement), it undertook an energetic recruitment campaign to meet demand from its clients and recruited eligible trainees, many with local area experience. Australian Reef Pilots had a sufficient number of pilots to meet demand and did not initially recruit.
In the years leading up to 2000, Torres Pilots continued to expand, recruiting pilots who met the entry requirements and, preferably, had local area experience. The competition between the providers led to significant recruitment as each provider had to meet demand with their own contracted pilots. The steady increase in traffic and the retirement of some older pilots increased demand for new pilots.
Another factor that increased demand for new pilots after 1993 has been a trickle of pilots leaving (a couple every year or so) to take up other employment, usually in port pilotage or administration. More recently, the departure rate appears to have increased. For example, of the 82 pilots who participated in the survey, at least five pilots retired and eight others left coastal pilotage in the 12 months following the survey.84 By contrast, a pilot who started in the former service stated that just three pilots left the service (not retired) in the period between 1950 and 1990.
Over the years, a few pilots first recruited and engaged by Torres Pilots have been recruited by Australian Reef Pilots. Hydro Pilots expanded from three pilots when it started to five pilots before the company was sold in 2006 and the number of pilots gradually declined. At the time of the survey (2011), Hydro Pilots was contracting two pilots. In recent years, Australian Reef Pilots has recruited qualified mariners to cover pilot retirements and meet service demands.
As a result of the diminishing number of Australian ships and seafarers, most of the pilots recruited since 2000 have not been drawn from the traditional pool of recruits with local area experience. Hence, many new entrants did not have previous local area experience. In the survey, 20 pilots indicated that their primary qualifications were obtained overseas. However, their qualifications are recognised in Australia and those with recent seagoing experience (mostly overseas) have a working knowledge of a shipboard SMS under the ISM Code.
In submission to the draft report, Maritime Safety Queensland (MSQ) pointed out that pilot recruitment needs to be closely examined given the forecast increase in shipping and the shrinking pool of professional seafarers in Australia. It feels that adopting a new framework for the qualification and experience levels of pilots and exploring other sources for new pilots is necessary, and noted the recruitment of RAN navigators in recent years.
The pilots’ survey responses with regard to their own recruitment suggest that, in general, the selection and recruitment process of pilotage providers is not uniform but has, over time, become more structured. Overall, the process is focused on an applicant meeting the AMSA entry requirements on which the selection criteria are based. Despite a diminishing number of suitably qualified applicants from within Australia and an increasing number from overseas, there does not appear to be an excessive number of applicants to make the recruitment process overly competitive.
None of the pilotage providers describe their pilot recruitment process in their SMS or quality manuals.
In submission to the draft report, Australian Reef Pilots stated that its pilot recruitment is managed by a recruitment committee through a structured selection process based on criteria and evaluation methodologies developed by professional human resources consultants and a panel of expert pilots. The provider advised that this process is described in a commercial-in-confidence document.
Torres Pilots submitted that it maintains a pilot recruitment and manning plan to identify future trainees. Selection involves verifying applicant qualifications with AMSA and considering their background and command experience. Suitable applicants are interviewed by the provider’s management with a senior pilot present if considered necessary. The applicant then undertakes two observer voyages with experienced pilots to assist the applicant in making a decision and allow the provider and its pilots to assess the applicant’s aptitude for training. An applicant’s references, including any from amongst the provider’s pilots, are also considered.
There is, however, a difference in how pilots perceive their recruitment process to that described by the providers. The comments of pilots in the survey and interview, including the comments of some who were recruited in recent years, do not suggest processes that are as formal or defined as those indicated by their providers.
A trainee pilot licence must be obtained before a pilot can start training. Most applicants first contact a provider to assure themselves of an opportunity to train and of probable employment before applying to AMSA for a trainee pilot licence. Provided applicants meet the qualification, medical and other AMSA requirements, they are issued with a licence.
Therefore, obtaining a trainee pilot licence is the defined and formal part of becoming a coastal pilot and the recruitment process is centred about it. Effectively, AMSA’s licensing process for a trainee is also a principal risk management tool for pilot recruitment.
Pilot working arrangements
Working arrangements and contractual terms are critical to creating an environment that allows individuals to concentrate on the service they provide rather than being distracted by professional dissatisfaction or feelings of insecurity.
On the face of it, the contractual arrangements between the pilotage providers and the pilots whom they engage would seem to be simply a commercial matter, unrelated to safety and safe operations. However, when contractual issues affect the performance of pilots, safety can be compromised. The working arrangements of pilots have the potential to influence everything from pilot training to the safe conduct of pilotages.
The contracts or agreements between pilotage providers and pilots identify the provider and the pilot as separate business entities and are generally valid for 3 years or more. Since 1993, pilots have provided their services exclusively through one provider, whether or not their contracts contained exclusivity clauses. At the time of the survey, the contracts offered by all providers included exclusivity clauses or implied this condition. For example, the Torres Pilots contract stated:
The pilot will not assist a competing pilot organisation nor in its formation hold any official position with a competing pilot organisation during the currency of this agreement.
Application to other pilot organisations will allow the Manager [Torres Pilots] to terminate this agreement if the Manager in his absolute discretion deems that termination is in the Manager’s best interests.85
The key point here is that individual contractor pilots provide their services through a single rather than multiple pilotage providers. Each provider has different arrangements for remunerating and/or assisting pilots with regard to pilot transfers and fees, travel, accommodation, rosters, training and licensing. All of these matters are decided and controlled by providers and, in practice, are not open to negotiation by pilots, either individually or collectively.
As outlined in section 3.4, providers take bookings from clients (often through a ship’s agent) requiring pilotage services. The cost of a pilotage service to a client (pilotage charge) is agreed with the provider. Each provider has regular clients with whom they have negotiated certain pilotage charges, depending on factors such as the expected volume of future bookings. Other clients pay their provider’s standard pilotage charge or negotiate another rate. The rate for a particular pilotage varies as it is set by competing providers. There can be a number of standard and negotiated rates for a pilotage between the same two locations or pilot boarding grounds. The rates are not directly proportional to pilotage distance or duration and no component of pilotage charges are specifically based on ship size, draught or speed.
Pilot transfer costs account for a major part of pilotage charges. For example, the PSA inquiry (section 2.6 refers) found that Blossom Bank helicopter transfer costs (post-June 1993) were about 90 per cent of the Hydrographers Passage pilotage charge. Torres Pilots’ pilotage charge schedules (2008 and later) indicate that these helicopter transfer charges are generally about 75 per cent of the pilotage charge for that route. The provider’s pilot boat transfer charges (boarding and disembarking) have, over the years, generally comprised a little over half of its Great North East Channel pilotage charges and about 40 per cent of its Inner Route pilotage charges.
The remaining part of pilotage charges cover a provider’s other costs, including pilot remuneration. The provider’s contractor pilots are not involved in setting or negotiating pilotage charges with clients.
The ATSB survey and pilot interviews left no doubt that contractual issues are a source of discontent amongst the majority of pilots. In the survey, 59 per cent of pilots indicated their preference to be employees while 25 per cent preferred remaining contractors (Figure 10).
Figure 10: Preferred working arrangement indicated by pilots
Of the remaining 16 per cent of survey respondents, most indicated a preference to either work for a pilots’ cooperative or a pilot-owned entity, some indicating a preference for shareholder status. Overall, these and some other comments in the survey suggest that many pilots wanted more control of their working arrangements even if they preferred employee status. This indicates that they considered their contractor status provided them less control of their working arrangements than what they expected as independent contractors.
Remuneration
A coastal pilot is paid a service fee (pilot’s fee) by his provider for each pilotage he has performed. A pilot’s total remuneration is driven by the number of pilotages performed, regardless of the pilot’s working hours or days on duty.
The pilot’s fee is set by the provider, or defined in the contract. The fee depends mainly on the pilotage charge (for the area or route) and, like the charge, it is not based on pilotage distance, time, ship size or draught. The pilot has no input into setting his fee other than agreeing to the terms of the contract. There are no defined hourly or daily rates for coastal pilots (through an award, regulation, or set by a co-operative or other body) on which their fees can be based.
Australian Reef Pilots has fixed pilot’s fees. Therefore, two pilots performing separate pilotages between the same two locations receive the same fee. The pilot transfers and other costs are recovered by the provider from the pilotage charge.
Hydro Pilots also pays its pilots a fixed fee that is specified in their individual contract (not necessarily the same). An annual fee increment applies for the 5 year term of the contract. At the time of the survey, the contract of one of the pilots assured him of being assigned at least 96 pilotages (per year). The contracts of each of the two pilots specified that they had agreed to ‘contract to Hydro Pilots exclusively’. The cost of pilot transfers supplied by its sister company, Mackay Helicopters, are recovered from the pilotage charges received by the provider
Torres Pilots distributes pilotage charges in a different way to other providers. The pilot’s fee is set as a part of the pilotage charge. The fee can vary depending on the negotiated contractual arrangement or agreement between Torres Pilots and its clients. Hence, two pilots performing a pilotage between the same two locations generally do not receive the same pilot’s fee.
In submission to the draft report, Torres Pilots stated that the fees earned by its pilots are aligned and proportionate to pilotage distance or duration. To support this claim, the provider compared its standard pilot’s fees with pilotage duration (based on a speed of 13 knots) in the three main pilotage areas. This example indicated that the pilot’s hourly rate for the Hydrographers Passage and Great North East Channel is 3 times and 2.8 times, respectively, the rate for the Inner Route. The provider noted that the higher hourly earnings recompense pilots for the time on board and between consecutive pilotages. Torres Pilots also advised that it negotiates lower pilotage charges for container ships in recognition of their faster speed.
However, Torres Pilots’ numerous different pilotage charges (and pilot’s fees) and the inevitably different transit durations (due to the ship’s capability, ballast/loaded condition and weather) introduce a wide variability to a pilot’s hourly rates. In any case, if the aim is to align pilot’s fees to total time (on board and between ships), it could simply and transparently be achieved by using that time as the basis rather than different charges and fees which depend on factors that cannot be controlled.
The different methods by which providers remunerate pilots provide different levels of transparency and certainty of income. These methods and the contracts are also intended to suggest that the pilot is a self-employed contractor providing pilotage services to different clients. This relationship between a pilot and various clients is apparent in the manner that Torres Pilots has documented financial transactions.
Torres Pilots has traditionally invoiced clients for the pilotage charge on behalf of the pilot performing the pilotage and, until 2006, provided a copy of the invoice to the pilot. When a client paid the pilotage charge, Torres Pilots retained 10 per cent of the pilot’s fee as its commission and paid the balance to the pilot. The costs of pilot transfers provided or arranged by Torres Pilots to the pilot were debited to his monthly account statement when incurred. The pilot’s account statement detailed the pilotage charges, transfer charges, pilot’s fees, commissions and other credits or debits. In case a client did not pay the pilotage charges, the bad debt was shared between the provider and all pilots. These documents provided pilots with transparency in those transactions.
The method used by Australian Reef Pilots and Hydro Pilots to remunerate their pilots does not provide the transparency described above. Pilots engaged by these providers may have a general idea of the pilotage charges, particularly if they were previously contracted to Torres Pilots or through information passed on by its pilots. However, it is apparent that they have little understanding of how pilotage charges are apportioned by their provider to cover their costs for pilot transfers, travel, accommodation and other operating costs. Nevertheless, the fixed pilot’s fee provides pilots certainty of their income from an individual pilotage.
Regardless of the provider, pilot income is based on pilotages performed and not on time. Faster ships, particularly where a pilot’s fees are fixed, offer pilots a better return for their time; the less time spent on a ship means the pilot is available earlier for his next job. The return for a pilot’s time also varies with pilotage route because the pilot’s fee is ‘passage based’ and not ‘time based’ and numerous factors impact on this time. Consequently, performing pilotages on certain routes may be more lucrative than others. In addition, long periods between pilotages, particularly when away from home on a tour of work, are a disadvantage because there is no income during these periods. The time based pay rate (using hours worked, days away from home or tours of duty duration) of coastal pilots is less than that of harbour pilots in Australia, and is discussed in the following section titled ‘tours of duty’.
In the ATSB survey, 37 pilots indicated one or more factors that affected the importance they intended to give safety (Figure 11). ‘Loss of income’ was the most commonly indicated factor. Pilot comments indicate that this factor translates to avoiding a reduction in their earnings, and the safety risk is related to fatigue plan infringements, not reporting incidents or risk events which may result in losing a client or otherwise disadvantage the pilot, and other such reasons. Sixty-two per cent of pilots considered pilots with other providers as competitors, 30 per cent considered pilots with their own provider as competitors and a few pilots were unsure (Appendix A, items 17 and 18). Similar views on this subject were expressed by a number of pilots at interview.
The per job basis of remunerating a pilot means that there may be instances when a pilot is placed in a position where managing duty hours and other matters in a certain way could provide a better financial return for a pilot’s time or some other advantage. These circumstances include recording travel and transfer time within mandatory rest periods, adjusting the completion time of a pilotage to get ahead in turn for the next job or to position their availability for a more attractive or lucrative pilotage, disembarking earlier to expedite the pilotage and other similar methods. Such actions may appear quite safe or harmless to the pilot but there is the potential for these to detract from safety, particularly when they reduce pilot rest or when ship speed, draught or tides are not considered as they otherwise would be. While such safety risks cannot be quantified in terms of risk events toward which they may have contributed, neither can the risks be dismissed as being insignificant.
Figure 11: Factors conflicting with safety as indicated by pilots
All pilotage providers are probably aware of the conflicting priorities of pilots described above. For example, in October 2011, Australian Reef Pilots provided information to its pilots in relation to a proposed revision of the pilot contract model. The following, from a series of numbered frequently asked questions included with that information, are relevant:
14. What advantages will this package have over our present system?
It gives pilots certainty and security of income and working life. Personal and professional lives can be planned. It relieves the stress of competing for work against colleagues so that a pilot can, while working, concentrate all his efforts on the task thus applying the strictest safety considerations to every aspect of his vocation.
20. What will stop the ‘rorts’ e.g. working the board to avoid ships?
A new set of operational rules will be written and ARP Ops will strictly manage those rules under the auspices of the CEO and the Chief Pilot. In effect, every ship will be a nomination and penalties (disqualification from future work) will apply to those deliberately ‘dodging’ particular ships.
In submission to the draft report, Australian Reef Pilots stated that situations resulting from internal competition between pilots based on their turn were a very rare occurrence.
However, pilots engaged by Australian Reef Pilots have a very different understanding of this matter. In submission, one of the provider’s senior pilots stated that the practice of pilots assessing and managing their turn for the next job ‘goes on a lot’ with pilots attempting to utilise their time to earn more or avoid a loss of time. Another of its pilots elaborated on a method routinely used by pilots (including himself) to get ahead in turn was by recording the landing time in a pilot boat instead of the arrival time at the pilot house. He explained further that all pilots took great interest in upcoming jobs by being fully aware of ship traffic via emailed job sheets, and job boards at pilot houses, a practice he described as ‘board watching’. One of the provider’s pilots noted the potential safety risk due to ill feeling between pilots competing with each other because per job remuneration meant different earnings for working the same number of days.
The extent to which pilots may have taken a safety risk probably varies but rest periods have apparently been a common casualty in attempts to best utilise their time. The survey, pilot interviews and submissions indicate that recording of rest periods and other ways to avoid financial disadvantage are not confined to the pilots of any one pilotage provider.
In submission, a pilot engaged by Torres Pilots offered other strategies through which pilots get ahead of others in turn for the next job. One method relates to disembarking a ship earlier (off Goods Island) by persuading the master that its lighter draught allows the pilot to disembark there (the rules permit this) instead of off Booby Island, as booked. He claimed that another method used by some was unnecessary overtaking in the Prince of Wales Channel to get ahead in turn. Such cases are probably rare but if and when they occur, the relatively confined waters of the channel mean unnecessary navigational risk. According to this pilot, some pilots remained in close contact with the provider to gain advantageous jobs and were favoured by the provider in return for their support.
Tours of duty
The per job basis of remunerating pilots is further complicated by their working arrangements in terms of the duration of the periods they are on duty and the number of pilotages that they perform during those periods.
Since 2003, pilot duty rosters have complied with the requirements introduced by AMSA under MO 54 (issue 3) to manage pilot fatigue (discussed in section 3.6). These requirements place limits on the duration of a pilot’s ‘tour of duty’86 and the number of consecutive pilotages that can be performed during a tour. In general, pilots undertake a tour of duty of 2 to 4 weeks followed by 3 to 5 days (sometimes more) of rest at home. The duration of these tours depends on various factors, including the pilotage area and the location of a pilot’s residence.
The number of pilotages performed by a pilot during a tour of duty, and hence the pilot’s income, has little to do with the tour’s duration. The volume of shipping traffic, the number of pilots waiting and the particular pilot’s turn in the queue for the next job are amongst the main factors that determine the number of pilotages he performs. Other factors that can have an influence include the duration and/or route of the next pilotage; the port where the pilot disembarks; the traffic there; whether it is his home; and the duration of a particular tour of duty.
In the ATSB survey, pilots indicated the number of days per year they spent away from home on tours of duty and the number of pilotages they performed per year. The number of days away and the pilotages performed depend on a number of factors, including the location of a pilot’s home, whether or not the pilot worked full time and the pilotage area/route worked. On a day-to-day basis, these factors introduce a high level of variation in the number of pilotages performed in a given period of time. This creates uncertainty about the amount of work that will come a pilot’s way and, hence, his income during a particular tour of duty.
Although some pilots choose to work on a part time or casual basis, the majority are full time pilots. At the time of the survey, 70 per cent of pilots were working full time and most of them lived in Cairns, Mackay, Brisbane and New South Wales. The Mackay based pilots worked only, or mainly, in the Hydrographers Passage and spent 38 days away from home per year, on average, to perform 112 pilotages, on average (Appendix A, item 5). Pilots from Cairns, Brisbane and New South Wales spent over 200 days away from home per year, on average, to perform 65 pilotages, on average, in the three main pilotage areas.
However, the average figures above are not indicative of the wide ranges that exist. For example, the number of days away for Brisbane based pilots ranged between 160 and 240 days and the pilotages performed was between 12 and 80 (Appendix A, items 4 and 5). In this regard, it should be noted that a Whitsundays pilotage on a passenger ship could take several days or weeks. On the other hand, the duration of a pilotage in the Hydrographers Passage is just a few hours, although boarding off Torlesse Island, PNG, significantly increases a pilot’s time on board.
Working away from home in remote areas/on board ships is probably a major factor impacting the perception that coastal pilots have of their working arrangements. Since most pilots (except those living in Mackay and working in the Hydrographers Passage) spend considerable time away from home, they may consider the financial return for their time is low in comparison to harbour pilots in Australia. Harbour pilots in most Queensland ports (except Brisbane) earn in the region of $200,000 per year. Coastal pilots working full time earn about the same, although some earn 10 to 20 per cent more depending on pilotage jobs done in the year and pilot’s fees specific to their provider (section 3.9.3 also refers). However, these coastal pilots are away from home for over 200 days per year and, in terms of time, this is more than double the annual working hours of harbour pilots, who are normally based in the ports where they work. In some remote area ports like Port Hedland, pilots stay there for the weeks when they are on duty (flying home when rostered off) but their incomes are much higher (more than twice that of full time coastal pilots).
Some of the issues related to coastal pilots working away from home can be partially addressed. For example, pilots living in ports adjacent to a compulsory pilotage area can often return home between pilotages. This is an advantage for them because they do not incur the costs of living away from home and have the benefit of more normal social interaction.
To better manage pilot rosters (and benefit pilots), Torres Pilots requires its pilots to reside in a port adjacent to a pilotage area so that they can regularly be assigned a ship without needing to travel to another port. About 75 per cent of the provider’s pilots live in the Cairns or Mackay regions and this has benefited them. According to Torres Pilots, its Cairns based pilots are rarely away from home for more than twelve consecutive days. They also have the option of returning home from the Torres Strait if a wait of more than 3 days is expected between consecutive pilotages. In contrast, most of the pilots engaged by Australian Reef Pilots live in the Brisbane region. A comparison of the number of pilotages performed by full time pilots based in Cairns and Brisbane indicated that Cairns based pilots performed more pilotages in the Inner Route than those residing in Brisbane while the latter performed comparatively more in the Hydrographers Passage (Figure 12). Pilot’s fees for the longer Inner Route pilotages are generally two to three times (depending on the provider and the different pilotage charges) that for Hydrographers Passage pilotages.
Figure 12: Number of pilotages performed as indicated by pilots
Pilot tours of duty are, therefore, complicated by a range of factors with a wide variation in the number of days that pilots spend away from home each year and the number of pilotages that they perform. The per job basis of remuneration means that two pilots contracted to the same provider, and who work for the same number of days, have different earnings. Hence, the connection that some pilots made between ‘loss of time’ and safety refers to circumstances that could disadvantage them unless managed in a certain way (Figure 11). While this is also a matter of personal choice and probably seen by the pilot as quite safe and harmless, other pilots may view it as manipulation. The key point here is that pilots should not, on a day-to-day basis, need to consider how to utilise their time to maximise earnings.
In submission to the draft report, Torres Pilots indicated that per day earnings of its pilots (residing in the same location) averaged over a 12 month term, were similar. The provider, therefore, considers that the per job basis of remuneration does not result in different earnings for the same number of days worked.
However, what is missing from Torres Pilots’ argument above is that there is a difference between ‘similar’ and ‘same’ earnings. Many factors affect those earnings on a day-to-day basis, when pilots do not necessarily consider their annual earnings. Furthermore, if the provider considers that per day pilot earnings are similar for the same number of days worked, then it would be logical, equitable and far simpler to base pilot remuneration on time rather than the per job method used.
Leave
As contractors, pilots have no ‘built-in’ paid leave entitlements. In 2003, as part of regulating pilot work and rest periods, AMSA set minimum recuperation periods for pilots and defined these as ‘leave’. These ‘leave’ periods are in addition to the rest days between consecutive tours of duty. Under the requirements, a pilot cannot work for more than 5 months without taking ‘leave’ and must have at least 9 weeks ‘leave’ per year. A ‘leave’ period cannot be less than two consecutive weeks.
The rosters developed for each provider’s pilots meet or exceed the minimum ‘leave’ requirements above. Hydro Pilots offers its pilots, through their contract, an additional 3 weeks of such ‘leave’ per year.
These ‘leave’ periods are effectively unpaid because pilots cannot conduct coastal pilotages during these periods and this adds another dimension to their non-time based remuneration. A number of pilots take up other work during this ‘leave’ to augment their income and/or occupy their time. Such work includes piloting in small ports, consulting and teaching. These work periods are not included in the management of their coastal pilotage work and rest periods.
Other arrangements
All pilotage providers expect contracted pilots to exclusively use their pilot transfer services and pilots have always used the transfer services provided or arranged by their provider. Providers operate these services from pilot bases which are located at, or as near as practicable to, the pilot boarding grounds of the respective pilotage areas and/or to suit their business and operational requirements. Therefore, pilots who are not resident at a pilot base must travel to or from the location of these bases and, between pilotages, require accommodation. These logistical requirements are funded by each provider from the pilotage charges recouped by them. Each provider manages these costs differently.
The accommodation for Australian Reef Pilots contracted pilots is arranged and paid by the provider. Pilots are provided a pilot house or equivalent accommodation at Cairns, Mackay, Thursday and Yorke islands in the Torres Strait and off Torlesse Island in PNG; where Australian Reef Pilots’ pilot bases are located. Meals are also provided in the three remote island bases. Similarly, travel for pilots while on a tour of duty is arranged and paid for by the provider. However, pilots are required to arrange their own travel at the start and the end of a tour of duty, usually to and from the base ports of Cairns or Mackay. The accommodation and travel arrangements are defined in their contracts.
Pilots contracted to Hydro Pilots live in Mackay from where their pilot transfers operate and they return home between pilotages. They are paid taxi fares, if required, to transfer to or from ships berthed at the Hay Point or Dalrymple Bay coal terminals, located about 35 km south of Mackay.
Until late 2010, pilots engaged by Torres Pilots made all their own travel and accommodation arrangements. To cover these expenses, they were paid a fixed amount called a ‘relocation allowance’ and this was included in the pilotage charge. The pilots stayed in motels or hotels except when at Coconut Island in the Torres Strait, where dedicated accommodation was provided and part of its cost shared among all pilots.
In 2009, two pilot houses were established at Thursday Island for pilots engaged by Torres Pilots. The first pilot house is owned by a group of pilots and used by them and some regular tenant pilots who make up about half the provider’s pilots. The other pilot house is owned by Torres Pilots and used by its remaining pilots. In late 2010, Torres Pilots began arranging travel for pilots while they were on tours of duty. To fund these travel and accommodation costs, Torres Pilots retained the relocation allowance from all pilotages, including those performed by pilots who did not use the provider’s pilot house at Thursday Island.
Insurance policies for loss of income and personal accidents are generally arranged on behalf of pilots by their providers and the costs recovered from each pilot. There may also be other arrangements that each provider has in place to manage extraordinary costs incurred, such as non-payment by clients and expensive charter flights. For example, Torres Pilots apportions such costs equally amongst its contracted pilots.
Summary
In general, the working arrangements of coastal pilots are largely determined by Australian Reef Pilots and Torres Pilots, the two main pilotage providers. Each pilot provides services through a single provider. Long term contracts, with exclusivity clauses and/or similar restrictions, have ensured that pilots are only contracted to a single provider. Since pilots are not providers, they cannot offer their services directly to clients.
The provider sets the pilot’s fee either as a fixed amount or some part of the pilotage charge. The pilot’s fee is ‘passage’ not ‘time’ based and, therefore, a pilot can only increase his earnings by performing more pilotages. Furthermore, the pilot’s fee varies with the pilotage area and there are also different fees in the same area. As pilot earnings are not directly related to time, there is a natural motivation for a pilot to utilise available time to maximise the number of pilotages performed. Safety requirements, particularly AMSA mandated rest and leave periods may be seen by some pilots as an impediment to their potential earnings.
The principle used by providers for deciding pilot travel, accommodation and other arrangements is similar to that used for pilot remuneration. These matters are decided by the providers and funded from pilotage charges (although Torres Pilots documented financial transactions to show its pilots as separate entities, distinct from the provider). Effectively, pilots work for a provider much like employees and are independent contractors only in terms of taking responsibility for the conduct of a pilotage. It is consistent then, that the majority of pilots have indicated that they would prefer to be employees. This could assure them of a fixed, equitable income and employment conditions rather than being independent contractors with very limited independence.
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